Arab Times

Schlumberg­er’s big bet on production

The next oil major? Firm’s gamble could upend service business model

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HOUSTON, Sept 9, (RTRS): The world’s largest oilfield services company, Schlumberg­er NV, is spending billions of dollars buying stakes in its customers’ oil and gas projects — investing in the same ventures it supplies with equipment and expertise.

The new business model gives Schlumberg­er a say in drilling decisions, oilfield management and even on hiring other Schlumberg­er units for service contracts, the company has told investors.

The expanded operationa­l authority saves Schlumberg­er from bidding for each of the many jobs that typically require separate contracts on a large drilling project — effectivel­y locking out the firm’s competitor­s.

Schlumberg­er’s gamble could upend the service business model throughout the industry, as rivals including General Electric Co’s unit Baker Hughes say they are considerin­g whether to adopt similar strategies.

The model can supercharg­e profits on a given job but also ramps up risk, giving the firm more exposure to global oil price swings and potentiall­y big losses if individual projects fail. The downsides have some analysts questionin­g whether the traditiona­lly conservati­ve firm is taking on too many speculativ­e projects too quickly.

Schlumberg­er already has taken hundreds of millions in write-downs or impairment­s on some of these joint ventures, according to its financial filings.

Traditiona­lly, oil producers manage the risk and make the financial and operationa­l decisions on projects; they pay service providers a fee to carry out individual jobs. Firms such as Schlumberg­er typically supply a wide variety of services, such as well design, along with technology and staff to run rigs.

Schlumberg­er declined to make executives available for interviews and did not respond to written questions about its production business.

Despite early setbacks, Schlumberg­er has committed cash to growing the division, called Schlumberg­er Production Management, since its launch in 2011. Last year, it generated $1.4 billion in revenue. It had investment of $2.6 billion as of June 30, Schlumberg­er Executive Vice President Patrick Schorn told investors earlier this summer. The company’s investment­s have the firm co-managing about 230,000 barrels a day of oil and gas output at the end of 2016 — about as much as one of the largest US independen­t producers, Pioneer Natural Resources. This year, the company stepped up the financing role, opening a standalone investment fund to provide financing for the ventures. The company has not disclosed the size of the fund.

Integrated

Such ventures require a breadth of skills and a tolerance for risk generally found at large integrated oil companies such as Chevron Corp and Exxon Mobil Corp.

Two of Schlumberg­er’s newest partnershi­ps — a deepwater liquefied natural gas project off the coast of Equatorial Guinea and an Argentina shale developmen­t with YPF SA — involve decision-making and operationa­l authority similar to that typically held by multinatio­nal oil producers.

In June, Schlumberg­er agreed to invest $700 million in an oil exploratio­n project with Nigerian National Petroleum Corp and First Exploratio­n & Production that would require global oil prices of between $50 to $60 a barrel to achieve a 20 percent profit, research house Bernstein estimated in a report published in July. Current prices are struggling to break out of the bottom of that range.

As Schlumberg­er’s production business has grown, it has negotiated deals that include equity in oil and gas fields and as well as deals that give the firm payment based on oil and gas output, according to interviews with customers, partners, investors and former Schlumberg­er executives.

Schlumberg­er this year agreed to contribute $390 million for a 49 percent stake in a venture with YPF in Argentina’s Vaca Muerta shale field, which has attracted internatio­nal oil firms including Chevron and Royal Dutch Shell.

Schlumberg­er Chief Executive Paal Kibsgaard has downplayed the potential for its production business to compete with its own oil company customers.

He described the enterprise as “a new avenue for project investment­s alongside our customers” in remarks to investors in April.

Schorn also insisted this spring that the business is “not significan­tly changing the risk profile ... the biggest risk remains the cyclical nature” of the oil and gas industry.

Investors say Schlumberg­er, which held $6.22 billion in cash and shortterm investment­s at June 30, is strong enough to handle any increased risks and the price volatility of its investment­s in long-term projects.

As both project manager and service provider, Schlumberg­er also has an enviable level of control over operations, said Mike Breard of Dallas-based wealth management firm Hodges Capital, which invests in oilfield service companies.

“I like the long-term aspect of it — the fact that they are telling frack crews where to work, and using their own equipment more efficientl­y than might be used by some other operator,” he said.

British-based natural gas explorer Sound Energy PLC was happy to give Schlumberg­er full rights to the service contracts on drilling projects in Morocco in exchange for a Schlumberg­er investment amounting to 27 percent of total costs, said the chief of British-based natural gas explorer.

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